While wearing a self-contained breathing apparatus and fire-protective clothing, 35 healthy firefighting students aged 19–27 years performed smoke-diving (entry into a smoke-filled room) during a simulated shipboard fire. The mean (±SD) ambient temperature inside the simulator was 119±12°C, and the task lasted 17±4 min. All subjects were fit according to their maximal oxygen consumption, which was 52.4±5.2 mL/min/kg (4.08±0.45 l/min). During the smoke-diving the average heart rate was 150±13 beats/min (79±6° of maximal heart rate attained in a cycle-ergome-ter test), and the peak heart rate was 180±13 beats/min (95±6% of maximal heart rate). The estimated oxygen consumption was 2.4±0.5 L/min (60±12% of maximal oxygen consumption). Neither ability to tolerate stress (as determinated by the instructors) nor previous experience in smoke-diving tasks seemed to influence the heart rate or estimated oxygen consumption during experiment. Smoke-diving was physically very demanding even for the young and fit subjects, showing the importance of regular evaluation of the health and physical fitness of every firefighter who has to carry out smoke-diving tasks.